Website Traffic for ANY Business with Local SEO: How-To & First Steps

Get consistent, interested website traffic to your company website by using “local SEO” (search engine optimization).

Summary: One of the first things you should do immediately after launching your small business website is “local SEO” (search engine optimization): Start marketing your website in as many quality Web directories as possible, to expand your Web presence.

When “saturating your industry” this way, you’ll build authority in the eyes of potential clients—and even in the eyes of search engines like Google. And when you build that authority, those search engines will begin to rank your website higher in their search results.

Tip: You want to start with local SEO “immediately” because it can take a few weeks to begin noticing results. And you won’t begin to see major website traffic gains (usually) for a few months. But once you do, they are well-targeted, steadily flowing, interested leads who searched specifically for something your company offers.

Directory Local Search Profiles: How You Benefit

Local directories (like Yelp or ApartmentGuide) and search engines (like Google or Bing) list business profiles by region, to help local customers and local businesses find each other. So getting listed with quality ones puts your website in front of the eyes of people who are looking for you, right where you are. Not only can that help improve search engine positioning, as local customers search for the precise solutions you offer, but there’s one other important competitive advantage: customer preference.

What’s a “Local Search Profile”?

Put plainly, this is a searchable listing for your business as indexed within a geographic/local directory or search engine. And when I say “indexed,” I don’t mean as in “waiting for directories to find and list your website” (which directories do not do). Instead, a local search profile is something you generally must create and add to the directory database manually.

Creating accurate, complete profiles is an integral part of local SEO for your website traffic strategy. As a bonus, they’re typically free to create and easy to build if your organization has the hours to spare.

But Why Local (and Not More Broadscale) Marketing?

Ad-ology Research answers this better than I ever could with their 2010 Audience Interests+Attitudes Study, which revealed that “the vast majority (73.6%) of U.S. consumers seem to prefer doing business locally.” <–tweet that]

Even more recently, the 2012 Public Affairs Pulse Survey reported that “more than two-thirds of the public (68%) prefer to do business with ‘a smaller local company that may charge somewhat higher prices.'” <–tweet it]

2012 Public Affairs Pulse Survey result

Local businesses are still preferred… even with higher prices? Now this is even better than we thought.

Doesn’t it make sense that one of the first things you should do for your newly online small business website, then, is to create local search profiles on the top local directories for your company?

Consumers’ strong local preferences aside, remember that achieving search rankings for specific, localized terms is vastly less competitive and overall easier. Therefore, starting to solicit website traffic on a local level is really a no-brainer.

Can You Use Local Marketing … with No Offline Presence?

Most businesses either seem to believe they don’t qualify — like you may have — or believe they should focus on “online” lead generation only, if their business is exclusively Web-based.

Disclaimer: Technically, a local search directory is, of course, “online” lead generation. What I mean is that small business owners often think of local directories as something they can use only when their businesses have an offline storefront.

Again, not even close.

Even if you don’t have a “brick and mortar” presence, you CAN promote your company with local marketing.

Reason #2:Many businesses believe their companies aren’t considered “local” because they don’t serve local customers exclusively, nor have a local address.

Again, not quite the case.

I don’t know about you, but every time I’ve ever registered for a business license in the U.S. of A., I had to give somebody somewhere an address. Didn’t you?

No matter where you’re working from, you have an address considered “local” to some state.

Tip: If you conduct business solely from home though, of course you wouldn’t want to plaster that address all over the Internets… But easy fix.

Some executive office suites can accept mail for you, as can the UPS Store, Mail Boxes Etc., and so on. Local post offices have also begun offering “Street Addressing,” allowing you to use a street address instead of a P.O. box. See if your local USPS has implemented this yet.

When you use this option, though, please know that a few search engines and directories (like Google, unfortunately) still may not (knowingly) allow you to set up a listing with that address. Technically, “online-only” businesses for some reason aren’t supposed to use a P.O. box as a business address. Ugh, what-evz.

The Difference Between Regular Search Results and Local Results – and Why It Matters

This little nugget drives home the importance (and the benefits) of building a complete local search profile for your company in these directories.

You’ll notice that regular search results include only title, description, and link(s) to your company website.

Local search results include those, plus other info, such as:

ratings and reviews (A)

physical address and phone (B)

a visual map pointer (C)

the business’ category (D)

and a link to directions (E)

…basically, all the stuff you’d want to find out about a local business before deciding to visit or call.

Bing’s Local Results:

Click it for full-size ^

Google’s Local Results:

Click it for full-size ^

In fact, many businesses without websites are listed in Google for local search terms. But how?

The listing is linked to their Google profile page even when no website exists.

When you fill out your business’s Google local (and other pages) completely and thoroughly, you’ll have the advantage over those businesses with incomplete profiles. Trust me, every little advantage helps fuel your search engine marketing campaign!

How to Fully Complete Your Local Search Profile for Best Results

Now that you realize your company qualifies for a local search profile in many directories, and you understand the value of making it as complete as possible… it’s time to get to submitting!

Well, not so fast.

It’s critically important to enter all of your company information (even down to using “St.” or “Street,” etc.) in exactly the same way in all local directories to avoid screwing up your search ranking potential.

This is so important that it deserves its own article. With so many factors going into ranking, it pays to ensure that we hit every target. Your business name (very, very important), category, customer ratings/reviews, photos, videos, etc., should all be chosen precisely to craft a high-response local search profile for your company. Check GetListed.org’s brief but informative plain-English primer for help with that here.

Consistency is Critical with Local SEO. Here’s Everything You Need…

Thankfully, I didn’t have to spend hours going through the directories to compile all the info needed (and neither do you ;). Here instead is a very useful list, all in one place, sampled from this article:

Business Name

Address

Phone number

Hours of operation

Email address

Website URL

Contact Person — name, phone number, email

Keywords

Photos – logo, of your office, products/services that you offer

Number of employees

Age of company

Fax number (if applicable)

Payment methods accepted

Business description (160 characters in length)

Affiliations/Memberships

Specialties

To their list, let’s also add:

Category(s)

Tags

Annual Revenue

Green Initiatives

Social Media Accounts

Media Links (pictures, videos, podcasts, PDFs)

Company “About” Information (usually a longer description than allowable in a “Description” field)

Fortunately, not all directories require this much info, but it’s nice to have it on hand when you get started so no one has to go digging.

How to Choose the Directories to Submit to for Maximum Website Traffic

Two ways:

Step 1. Start with the major national directories and engines that offer local segmentation.

For instance, Bing.com is one primary search engine; Bing.com/local is the geo-targeted subdirectory of their main engine where you’d build your local search profile. Cool, right?

So here are 20 of the top local directories below, in alphabetical order. (I haven’t listed direct links to directory submission pages in most cases to keep the list fresh/relevant, as their sub-pages occasionally change.)

Importantly, please note that“top” doesn’t always mean the first results that come up during your search. For my clients at Excellent Presence, to cover all bases, we do select “first results” as well as the top-ranking directories in which your competitors are listed.

Hint: How do you decide which directories are “top-ranking” if not those that appear at the “top” of search results for a certain term?

Easy. Check the directory’s traffic rank (with Alexa), as well as its PageRank; then, order your directory list from most to least popular.

We’re getting there!

What to Do When Directories Don’t Disclose Where or How to Add a Listing

Yes, this actually happens. And yes, it will be annoying.

In many cases, it’s easy to simply overlook the submission page, as some directory interfaces simply have way too much going on. So, first, try scrolling to the very top or very bottom of any directory page and look for a link stating “Add Your Business,” “Add a Listing,” or, yes, even “Advertise with Us.”

Despite the wording, the vast majority of these sites are completely free for at least a very basic listing — even those submission forms you’ll from the “advertising” page. In those cases, you’ll usually just end up going most of the way through the listing process before you understand the “limitations” of your free-level listing. (For instance, as with all things AT&T, I find their listing process to be overly convoluted and a pain in the @#%$. But just near the end of the process, you’ll find that their stripped-down basic listings are free.)

Hint: Don’t worry about the “privileges” stripped from certain directory listings. When it all comes down to it, sometimes the “ranking weight” Google gives for the directory link matters more than the paltry amount of website traffic you’d directly receive from it.

Make sense?

While you shouldn’t expect an onslaught of website traffic from listings in local and industry directories, the website traffic you do receive will be more qualified, your website will gain more local credibility in the major engines (i.e., Google), and you gain locally relevant backlinks, all of which help with rankings for your overall search engine marketing campaign.

The Reveal:

While your competitors are spending all their time on “the usual” means of online promotion (like submitting articles, press releases, and doing general/global search engine marketing within Google, Bing, and Yahoo), *you* can gain an edge by considering your business local — because it is — and beginning your local SEO campaign right away.

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H. T. Major is the founder of Excellent Presence. To see how we can help get your diverse, goal-focused organization more clients from the Internet, call (919) 964-3977 or write us for a free strategy session.